Bristol Post

Housing vision Plan for homes at charity hub

- Beth CRUSE beth.cruse@reachplc.com

REVISED plans have been unveiled to turn the Vassall Centre in Fishponds into an accessible ‘multigener­ational neighbourh­ood’ with facilities for the local community.

Plans for the hub, which currently offers work and conference space to not-for-profit organisati­ons, include 40 flats for the elderly, 41 ‘affordable’ homes for families, a courtyard, cafe, nursery and gardens.

Bristol Charities, the new owners of the Vassall Centre, first unveiled transforma­tion plans in November, with an aim to deliver affordable, high-quality homes for the elderly and families, along with accessible workspace for businesses and charities and new community facilities.

This week the plans have taken a step foward as new images have revealed exactly what the neighbourh­ood could look like.

The proposed centre will be made up of three areas, with homes for older people at one end of the site, affordable homes for families at the other, and accessible workspace, community facilities and shared, public outside space in the middle.

The plans will be delivered in two phases, with new workspaces for for existing charities based at the centre coming first, and new homes and facilities second.

Bristol Charities, which purchased the former hospital facility for soldiers last year, says designs for the developmen­t are organised around an outdoor recreation­al space.

There will be an accessible hub for the charities currently based at the centre, including a cafe, nursery and gateway building with bookable community spaces, together with affordable housing for older people in need, families and smaller households.

Forty one-bed and two-bed flats with balconies will be created around a central courtyard garden for older people, all of which “will be let at affordable rents.” There will be a communal lounge and roof terrace to encourage residents to meet and help combat loneliness. This housing will also connect to the nursery building via a garden room to encourage interactio­n between different generation­s.

In addition, 41 high quality affordable homes will be created.

Bristol Charities says the mix of twobed and three-bed houses with gardens and one-bed and two-bed apartments with balconies, will be offered “for rent or low-cost shared ownership.”

Sustainabl­e materials will be used in the buildings to reduce energy consumptio­n and fuel bills and landscapin­g around the site will provide spaces for wildlife.

Fishponds residents are being asked to have their say on the plans. Consultati­on is running until June 6, with sessions allowing local people to voice their thoughts or concerns being held at the centre and online.

Bristol Charities has already made some changes to its plans following the initial consultati­on. It says the larger hub building has been reposition­ed, and the apartment building for affordable homes reduced in size. The organisati­on says the buildings will range from two to three storeys, to ensure the developmen­t fits in well with the local area.

Bristol Charities says it is taking advice from a specialist accessibil­ity consultant, to improve its current facilities. Features of the new designs include central easy-to-find shared spaces, a wide central corridor so wheelchair­s can pass, and improving visibility with glazed ‘shop fronts.’

Julian Mines, chief executive officer at Bristol Charities, said: “We have listened carefully and our revised approach responds to the views and concerns of tenants and the local community, providing much more detail about what the proposed developmen­t will look like and how the different elements will work together.”

 ?? Pic: Bristol Charities ?? How the revised Vassall Centre in Fishponds could look
Pic: Bristol Charities How the revised Vassall Centre in Fishponds could look

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